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OverviewWith a focus on nineteenth-century Cuba, Víctor Goldgel Carballo conceptualizes the analytical category of racial doubt: the hesitation produced by divergent, contradictory, or ambiguous understandings of race. Racial doubt is the flip side of racialism, or of the assumption that social hierarchies are based on the existence of races, imagined as natural or prior to those hierarchies. Mapping key moments of a century that witnessed the peak of racial slavery, abolition, and the birth of the Black press, this book shows how captives, free people of color, and Afro-Cuban authors leveraged doubts to overcome racist sociopolitical structures. It interweaves analyses of literature, including poems by enslaved authors and a novel by a mixed-race journalist, with unpublished archival material, including testimonies of kidnapped Afrodescendants. Focusing on how people held multiple views of race simultaneously, it examines debates crucial to the history of the Americas, including color-blindness and shifting understandings of Blackness. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Víctor Goldgel Carballo (University of Wisconsin, Madison)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Weight: 0.250kg ISBN: 9781009692885ISBN 10: 1009692887 Pages: 294 Publication Date: 14 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsReviews'Racial Doubt is a timely reminder that race functions according to a social code, and that its mechanics of power, inclusion and exclusion, are also quite flexible, even as its goal is to establish boundaries.' Jerome Branche, University of Pittsburgh 'In this powerful book, Victor Goldgel Carballo explores the many and sometimes contradictory definitions of Blackness that emerged amongst Cuba's people of African descent who expressed an existential commitment to writing as a space for rethinking hegemonic definitions of race. What emerges is an originally argued, complex, and evocative narrative, based on careful readings of both published and little-known archival texts. It is work that will stand the test of time.' Adriana Chira, Emory University 'The concept of 'racial doubt' rivals the fetish in its explanatory power. Race, like value, exists and doesn't exist, creating a useful instability on which cultures built on slavery rest and sometimes rock. Periodic rebellions against 'race' reveal a difficult reality: race is a fantasy that readily congeals into a weapon of oppression.' Elaine Freedgood, Professor Emeritus, New York University 'How could people in a slave society maintain that race was a stable and essential category even as they routinely recognized its fluidity and fragility? Victor Goldgel Carballo draws on an astonishing array of sources and approaches to provide a convincing answer. Showing how Cubans of all backgrounds experienced this paradox, Racial Doubt explores the open secrets and impassioned debates that made 'not saying' a defining feature of nineteenth-century racial ideology.' David Sartorius, University of Maryland Author InformationVíctor Goldgel Carballo is a novelist and Professor of Spanish at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is the author of Cuando lo nuevo conquistó América, which won prizes for best book from the Latin American Studies Association and Casa de las Américas. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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